RESUMO
The development of covalent adaptable liquid crystal networks (LCNs) enabled by introducing dynamic covalent bonds has endowed liquid crystal actuators with self-healing properties and reversible shape programmability, broadening their applications in diverse soft robotic devices. However, the finite molecular design strategy limits the recyclability and the architectural diversity of these materials. Here, a strategy is first reported for fabricating photoresponsive polydisulfide-based covalent adaptable LCNs by ring-opening polymerization of cyclic dithiolane groups. Based on the disulfide metathesis, the resulting materials are self-healable, reshapable, and reprogrammable. Importantly, the equilibrium between the polymer backbones and the dithiolane-functionalized monomers enables catalytic depolymerization to recycle monomers, which could significantly weaken the disadvantage of subtractive manufacturing of photomechanical devices. This work rooted in chemistry would provide an economical and environmentally friendly strategy for the fabrication of functional soft robotics with excellent programmability and renewability and beyond.
RESUMO
Adding colloidal nanoparticles into liquid-crystal media has become a promising pathway either to enhance or to introduce novel properties for improved device performance. Here we designed and synthesized new colloidal hybrid silica nanoparticles passivated with a mesogenic monolayer on the surface to facilitate their organo-solubility and compatibility in a liquid-crystal host. The resulting nanoparticles were identified by 1 Hâ NMR spectroscopy, TEM, TGA, and UV/Vis techniques, and the hybrid nanoparticles were doped into a dual-frequency cholesteric liquid-crystal host to appraise both their compatibility with the host and the effect of the doping concentration on their electro-optical properties. Interestingly, the silica-nanoparticle-doped liquid-crystalline nanocomposites were found to be able to dynamically self-organize into a helical configuration and exhibit multi-stability, that is, homeotropic (transparent), focal conic (opaque), and planar states (partially transparent), depending on the frequency applied at sustained low voltage. Significantly, a higher contrast ratio between the transparent state and scattering state was accomplished in the nanoparticle-embedded liquid-crystal systems.